Schools
Oak Forest HS Hispanic Club Hosts Day of the Dead Festivities
El Dia de los Muertos celebrates life and death
Oak Forest High School Hispanic Club hosted the Day of the Dead Festivities on October 30 in a special presentation. The day is known as “El Día de los Muertos” and it is a 3,000 year old tradition which celebrates life and death and honors those who have died. The Day of the Dead is celebrated traditionally on either November 1, All Saint’s Day, or on November 2, All Soul’s Day.
In the celebration, the club presented a slide show and a short movie which educated audiences, which were Spanish and English Language Learner classes, about El Día De Los Muertos. They also highlighted traditional things of this cultural celebration, such as the family ofrenda, or altar. On that ofrenda, families would place pictures of their loved ones, food that their loved ones liked to eat, sugar skulls, marigolds, tamales and mole, a cross or a statue of the Virgin of Guadalupe, and water and salt. They emphasized that this holiday is not a sad holiday because it is a happy holiday where the souls of the departed bring good luck.
After the presentations, students could visit various stations where they could get their faces painted (as pictured), or they could decorate sugar skulls, they could sample delicious Pan De Muertos, or Bread of the Dead, or they could write messages to their loved ones on the Oak Forest High School ofrenda, or altar.
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Students enjoyed the activities and everyone learned a little about El Día de los Muertos.